home    about    browse    search    latest    help 
Login | Create Account

Stated willingness-to-pay for organic fruit and pesticide ban. An evaluation using both web-based and face-to-face interviewing.

Canavari, Maurizio; Nocella, Giuseppe and Scarpa, Riccardo (2005) Stated willingness-to-pay for organic fruit and pesticide ban. An evaluation using both web-based and face-to-face interviewing. Journal of Food Products Marketing, 11 (3), pp. 107-134.

[thumbnail of J038v11n03_07FrontPage.pdf] PDF - English
Limited to [Depositor and staff only]

57kB

Document available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/J038v11n03_07


Summary

Income growth in highly industrialised countries has resulted in consumer choice of foodstuffs no longer being primarily influenced by basic factors such as price and organoleptic features. From this perspective, the present study sets out to evaluate how and to what extent consumer choice is influenced by the possible negative effects on health and environment caused by the consumption of fruit containing deposits of pesticides and chemical products. The study describes the results of a survey which explores and estimates consumer willingness to pay in two forms: a yearly contribution for the abolition of the use of pesticides on fruit, and a premium price for organically grown apples guaranteed by a certified label. The same questionnaire was administered to two samples. The first was a conventional face-to-face survey of customers of large retail outlets located around Bologna (Italy); the second was an Internet sample. The discrete choice data were analysed by means of probit and tobit models to estimate the utility consumers attribute to organically grown fruit and to a pesticide ban. The research also addresses questions of validity and representativeness as a fundamental problem in web-based surveys.


EPrint Type:Journal paper
Keywords:Organic fruit, willingness-to-pay, stated preferences, pesticide ban, contingent valuation, non-market valuation
Subjects: Values, standards and certification > Consumer issues
Research affiliation: Italy
Italy > Univ. Bologna
Deposited By: Canavari, Prof. Maurizio
ID Code:10916
Deposited On:21 Jun 2007
Last Modified:12 Apr 2010 07:35
Document Language:English
Status:Published
Refereed:Peer-reviewed and accepted

Repository Staff Only: item control page

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics